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General Gnutella / Gnutella Network Discussion For general discussion about Gnutella and the Gnutella network. For discussion about a specific Gnutella client program, please post in one of the client forums above. |
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![]() The active and developed gnutella applications are a different breed when compared to most of the closed source early implementations of gnutella. Some of the new applications still retain a little compatibility for older applications (on the network), but for the most part is has been decided that the older apps hurt the network. For some operating systems (retro) this means no gnutella. Which is fine. Who really cares? But there are plenty of folk that like using retro gear and or software. There is a gnutella client for Amiga. That particular platform does not have the power to run a modern gnutella client, even if someone developed it. The new Amiga clone "Vampire" might be an exception. I don't think there is a gnutella client for Windows 3x, but the later computers it ran on could run an early gnutella/0.6 application just file; if someone wrote one. Windows 98se could run and had existing gnutella/0.6 apps that could run on it. Some of those need patching to run on newer windows, if at all. Some of these older applications are going to disappear from the net. Some of the really old gnutella/0.4 applications have already gone from the net. I'm not even sure if you can find the original gnutella source anywhere. I looked. You'd think that at least the original gnutella source would have some collectors interest. I can't even find a gnutella application on winworldpc dot com. That site is completely committed to retro apps and operating systems. Does any one have an interest in supporting older versions of the network? If for nothing else, to support the function of these older clients on their original operating systems. I personally think it would be an interesting way for people to share abandonware. I suppose the same could be done with napster and others. But gnutella does not need a server. There are older torrent clients that ran on Windows 98, but not Amiga. Maybe the idea would require the older client to be patched to prevent gwebcache functionality. Or maybe we would need new gwebcache updates to support dividing the G1/0.6 retro, G1/0.6 new, and G2. Someone could port modern gnutella back to older systems. But like with the Amiga, many of those older machines don't have the specs to support it. The few that do would likely only ever be leaves. There are plenty of sites hosting retro software. Some of those sites require that you use a modernish browser. And plenty of people work around that issue just fine. So maybe there is no real reason to support retro gnutella. I certainly see the need to keep is separate from modern gnutella. Eventually retro machines will need to jump through some hoops to even connect to the internet. But I am sure people will still fine a way to do it. Hackaday dot com is full of people finding ways to connect non internet capable machines to the interent. Is there a desire out there, at all, for a retro gnutella community? Does anyone see a point in trying? Is there even a point in talking about it? Last edited by h4x5h17; July 4th, 2020 at 03:54 PM. Reason: changes: gnewtella > gnutella leafs > leaves |
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